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*Vintage Elegance*

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This Site is Dedicated to the Memory of Marilyn Monroe, a Beautiful Legacy...whose life tragically came to an end way before her time!
The Candle Burned Out, Long Before The Legend Ever Did.............
&hearts &hearts GOOD-BY NORMA JEANE &hearts &hearts
Birth Name: Norma Jeane Mortenson
Also Known As: Norma Jeane Baker
Birth date: June 1, 1926
Birth place: Los Angeles, CA
Death date: August 5, 1962
Death place: Brentwood, CA
Burial location: Corridor of Memories, ..24,
at Westwood Memorial Park in Los Angeles, CA
Height: 5 feet 5 1/2 inches
Weight: Varied, 115 - 120 lbs.
Measurements:
37-23-36 (Studio's Claim);
35-22-35 (Dressmaker's Claim)
Hair color: Blonde
Eyes: Blue
High schools:
Van Nuys High School;
University High School
Occupations: Model, Actress, Singer
Mother: Gladys Baker
Half-brother: Hermitt Jack Baker
Half-sister: Berniece Miracle
Marriages:
Jimmy Dougherty (1942-1946);
Joe DiMaggio (1954);
Arthur Miller (1956-1961)
Stepchildren:
Joe DiMaggio, Jr., Jane and Robert Miller
Information compiled from marilynmonroe.com
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Thoughts about Marilyn Monroe
(See Blog above for full story)
06-01-2007
"Hollywood is a place," Marilyn Monroe once said, "where they'll pay you a thousand dollars for a kiss, and fifty cents for your soul.
"I know, because I turned down the first offer often enough, and held out for the fifty cents."
..
Had she lived, Marilyn Monroe would have turned 81 today (06-01-2007). But she didn't live. She died 45 years ago, at age 36. Columnist Army Archerd wrote in DAILY VARIETY at the time, "Marilyn Monroe was late for everything – but much too early for death."
Who was Marilyn Monroe? What does she and her films mean to each new generation? And why and how did she die so young?
For starters, obviously, first, last and always, Marilyn was uniquely beautiful, and tragically vulnerable. As the songs say, and the continuing parade of documentaries show, her voluptuous yet seemingly accessible and innocent image established her as the blonde bombshell against which all others have, and will be measured, and for some time to come. She was unquestionably the sex goddess of the twentieth century.
So she wasn't the most photographed woman in the history of creation for nothing. Our eyes go straight to her in any still photo, and in every movie scene, too. Those external features are simply remarkable, and demand attention.
Our hearts are drawn to her as well, as soon as we learn anything about her true life story. She was the little girl who never knew her father, and whose unstable mother was institutionalized. "I never lived with my mother," Marilyn revealed in her final interview. As a child, nobody wanted her. She lived in foster homes. "The whole world was always closed to me," she lamented. That is, until she turned eleven. Then, to her everlasting astonishment, everybody wanted her. What to make of that?
She could never reconcile such extremes in her extraordinary life, or make sense of what happened, or why. She was suddenly this model, and then starlet, who all alone, overcame enormous odds, fighting up hill, to become a movie queen, and marry baseball immortal Joe DiMaggio, in what was surely a storybook romance. Wasn't it? Storybook? The happily-ever-after kind?
It seemed so, if ever so briefly. Because then, just as suddenly, it all unraveled. Her final movie was called SOMETHING'S GOT TO GIVE. So it did. Like her life, she never got to finish it.
Hers is an irresistible story, from poignant, disadvantaged childhood innocence, to spectacular success in Hollywood, to tragic, early death. In her wake has come an ever-growing library of books, each telling – but many only inventing -- Marilyn's inside story, and naturally exploiting her sexual escapades, too. In fact if one is to believe every new "as told to" Hollywood biography written over the past half-century, was there ever anyone pictured in the ACADEMY PLAYERS DIRECTORY back then that she didn't have sex with?
"They took it, they grabbed it, and they ran," she said.
If the poor woman herself could not make sense of what happened in her life, how is anyone else supposed to? Yet so many try, with no let up in sight.
Maybe only one thing is certain. With all the pinup shots taken by master photographers, and such classic movies as ALL ABOUT EVE, THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH, and SOME LIKE IT HOT -- where Marilyn will presumably live forever on screen -- though she left us as a young woman decades ago, it is not likely that her story and her iconic image will even begin to fade from public consciousness. Not for many generations to come, if ever.
That combination of innocence and vulnerability together with the kind of world class, luminous sensuality Marilyn had, will doubtless continue to transcend time and cultural barriers. So far, from this remove, it certainly looks that way. And if for no other reason than her looks are that way.
Actor and stage director Lee Strasberg, in his eulogy, made this observation: "Marilyn Monroe was a legend. In her own lifetime she created a myth of what a poor girl from a deprived background could attain. For the entire world she became a symbol of the eternal feminine."
During her lifetime, Marilyn gave precious few broadcast or filmed interviews. So there is little to draw upon for use in documentaries. Others speak. Not Marilyn, herself. Her real voice, the way she really spoke, is absent in those films. Plus most of her movies offer only a uniform character she played. In time Marilyn Monroe became a caricature of herself on screen.
But following the debacle of SOMETHING'S GOT TO GIVE, Marilyn needed to get a story out there, to defend herself, to explain herself. She was desperate; it looked like her movie career was over (and it was). She had something to sell and sought a forum. She arranged for what turned out to be audio-taped interviews with writers from LIFE magazine and FRENCH MARIE CLAIRE. Her transcribed remarks were published within weeks, but not before she died. Then the tapes with her voice were locked away.
Everything in the film is understated. Marilyn speaks in simple declarative sentences. She speaks slowly, clearly, beautifully, almost in perfect prose, surprisingly without verbal crutches the way alleged stars do today. She explains calmly what some would see as the train wreck of her life, because it was all normal … for her. She had no other, comparative experience. So everything makes some kind of sense -- at least to her.
There are plenty of pauses in between her remarks. And one after another, hearing the facts of her life in this way, it's like being struck between the eyes with a blunt instrument. Even if things are not really so clear to Marilyn, as she speaks, they do come into unnerving focus for us.
She speaks about fame, and her own celebrity and sexuality. "It's nice to be included in other people's fantasies," Marilyn stated, "but you also like to be accepted for your own values at that given time."
In view of the way she looked – both a blessing and a curse -- and what she'd done with her life, was that ever going to happen? Sadly, maybe she concluded, no, it was not.
Perhaps, in retrospect, in 2007, her real fans today do accept Marilyn Monroe for her values, as well as her externals. One would like to hope so. In her final interview, in words one can hear her speak in this documentary, she explains, "I want to say, that if I am a star, the people made me a star. There was no studio, and no person … but the people did it. It was a reaction that came in, to the studio. I mean, fan mail … you can't imagine. When (the people) go to see a movie, they judge, for themselves."
Today, tomorrow, and for a long time to come, everyone knows the verdict.
(Read the full story in my blog above...I have edited out some of the paragraphs to shorten up for this front page admission.)

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A Gift from My Beautiful Friend...Layla

FROM MY DEAR FRIEND LAYLA:

COLORIZATION'S BELOW:
DONE BY MY BEAUTIFUL FRIEND MARILYN

I'd like to meet:



Friends...Leave Me A Comment In My Comment Box!

THE GANG:

Graphic Design Courtesy of My Sweet Friend Leilani:

Music:



MARILYN'S RECORDINGS:

Movies:

MARILYN'S FAVORITE MOVIE STARS:
Clark Gable & Jean Harlow
FAVORITE MOVIE: GONE WITH THE WIND
MARILYN'S MOVIES:
01.) Dangerous Years (1947)
02.) You Were Meant for Me (1948)
03.) Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! (1948)
04.) Green Grass of Wyoming (1948)
05.) Ladies of the Chorus (1948)
06.) Love Happy (1949)
07.) A Ticket to Tomahawk (1950)
08.) The Asphalt Jungle (1950)
09.) The Fireball (1950)
10.) All About Eve (1950)
11.) Right Cross (1950)
12.) Home Town Story (1951)
13.) As Young As You Feel (1951)
14.) Love Nest (1951)
15.) Let's Make It Legal (1951)
16.) Clash by Night (1952)
17.) We're Not Married! (1952)
18.) Don't Bother to Knock (1952)
19.) Monkey Business (1952)
20.) O'Henry's Full House (1952)
21.) Niagara (1953)
22.) Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953)
23.) How to Marry A Millionaire (1953)
24.) River of No Return (1954)
25.) There's No Business Like Show Business (1955)
26.) The Seven Year Itch (1955)
27.) Bus Stop (1956)
28.) The Prince and the Showgirl (1957)
29.) Some Like It Hot (1959)
30.) Let's Make Love (1960)
31.) The Misfits (1961)
32.) Something's Got to Give (1962)
(The Last Film MM was working on, when she left us)

Television:

Colorization by Vintage Elegance:

Books:

MARILYN MONROE BIOGRAPHY:

Colorization Courtesy of My Sweet Friend Emma"

Photo Courtesy of My Dear Friend Leilani:

Heroes:

MARILYN'S FAVORITES:
Jean Harlow and Clark Gable

My Blog

Check out this video: Somethings gotta give Marilyn

Somethings gotta give Marilyn Add to My Profile | More Videos...
Posted by *Vintage Elegance* on Tue, 19 Jun 2007 01:56:00 PST

Check out this video: Marilyn Monroe

Our Beautiful Marilyn ~ We Love You! Marilyn Monroe Add to My Profile | More Videos ...
Posted by *Vintage Elegance* on Tue, 19 Jun 2007 01:41:00 PST